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Call for Publications

Theme: Indian Religions and the Concept of God
Publication: Sophia: International Journal of Philosophy and
Traditions
Date: Special Issue (2024)
Deadline: 30.11.2022

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Although Western philosophy of religion has developed many useful
exegetical and philosophical tools for evaluating Abrahamitic
conceptions of God as they apply to respective philosophical
traditions, there is a growing awareness that such monotheistic
Western approaches might conceal and prohibit a culturally sensitive
and philosophically adequate appreciation of the numerous concepts of
God found in religious traditions outside of the Western hemisphere.
This awareness, which is part of the motivation beyond what is known
as cross-cultural philosophy of religion, encompasses both the need
for and the encouragement of new dialogues between Western philosophy
of religion and non-Western traditions as a means to foster a deeper
mutual understanding of the variety of concepts of God or the divine
developed in the history of humankind.

Divinity in some Indian religions, such as Vaiṣṇavism, Śaivism and
Śaktism, is often conceived monotheistically, as a supreme OmniGod
(much like Western accounts of God.) Despite the evidence supporting
this, these Indian concepts of God exhibit certain peculiarities that
threaten the idea of their being monotheistic (or even theistic, one
might say.) For instance, they manifest a plurality of divine forms,
referred to as devatās and avatāras (divinely incarnations), they
subsequently assimilate or incorporate other divinities in the Hindu
pantheon and continue to exist in ambiguous relationships with them
(an example being those between Viṣṇu, Śiva, Brahmā, and the
Goddess), they are united with ordinary living beings in various
ways, and they sometimes possess (exude?) ultimately impersonal or
abstract nature. Moreover, in the Indian subcontinent, theistic
traditions have resided alongside those that are decidedly
non-theistic (for instance, Jain, Buddhist, and naturalist
traditions), or non-theistically inclined (such as Nyāya and perhaps
Yoga within Hinduism), and possibly a[mono]theistic (as in the
Cārvāka and Mīmāṁsā schools) – although concepts of divinity in all
these traditions are up for debate. Given all of this, we might ask:
are Indian theistic traditions really monotheistic? Or, to put it in
conceptual terms, is their concept of God a monotheistic one? Or, is
their concept of divinity theistic at all?

Accepting that there are different conceptions of divinity among the
Indian religious and philosophical traditions, we are then behoved to
pose this question: how can these concepts of God be philosophically
characterized? What divine properties does any given tradition
ascribe to its divinity? Can this divinity be described in a
consistent way? Or is it a contradictory concept? If the concept is
contradictory, how would this affect its intelligibility? Does any of
those concepts of God have some advantage over traditional
philosophical accounts of God? How do they relate to well-known
accounts of God, such as those of classical theism, pantheism,
panentheism, process theism, open theism, etc.? And what are the
difficulties peculiar to these Indian concepts of God?

This special issue of Sophia: International Journal of Philosophy and
Traditions will address these questions and approach the concept of
God in Indian religions from a contemporary philosophical
perspective. We invite submissions of papers on general philosophical
topics related to Indian religions and the concept of God, including
but not restricted to the following themes:

- God in Indian religious traditions.
- Divine attributes and Indian concepts of divinity.
- Indian concepts of divinity vs. western concepts of God.
- Atheistic or agnostic arguments against the coherence of Indian
  concepts of God.
- Vaiṣṇavism/Śaivism/Śaktism: monotheistic, panentheistic or what?
- Language and God in Indian traditions.
- Divinity and Hindu deities.
- Relation of the divine with the world: creation and
  difference/non-difference.
- Consciousness and Indian concepts of divinity: cosmopsyshism,
  panenpsychism or what?

Papers should be submitted through Sophia’s Editorial Manager
specifying that they are being submitted to the special issue on
Indian Religions and the Concept of God:
https://www.editorialmanager.com/soph/default1.aspx

Sophia's submission guidelines:
https://www.springer.com/journal/11841/submission-guidelines

Submitted papers will go through a double-blind peer-review process.
The deadline for submission is November 30, 2022.

Guest-editors:
Ricardo Silvestre, Alan Herbert and Purushottama Bilimoria
Email: ricard...@ufcg.edu.br – a...@ochs.org.uk

Further information:
https://www.logicandreligion.com/vaishnava-concept-of-god

Journal website:
https://www.springer.com/journal/11841






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